LATEST Brexit news: Experts have claimed rates of cheating and adultery are set to soar in the case of a no deal, with Leave voters most likely to cheat.

Yesterday's announcement that a 'no deal' Brexit is still on the table will see adultery in the UK go up in the event that we crash out of the EU, according to cheating website IllicitEncounters.com. The website claims that based on its large client base more people are likely to cheat on their spouse in the case of a no deal. However, according to a report today no deal Brexit is the ‘most popular option’ among the general public. How do the experts claim no deal Brexit might cause more cheating?

Brexit news: IllicitEncounters.com claims cheating could rise by 35 per cent with a no deal (Image: GETTY)

When polled on how they voted in the 2016 referendum, for the second time the Leave voters had a majority, this time it was 70 per cent of the 1000 members of IllicitEncounters.com surveyed that admitted to voting to leave the EU.

Harry, 57 from Great Yarmouth, a member of the site and Leave voter told the site researchers: “I voted leave for the promise of a brighter future, what we got instead is 2 years of stagnant pay and price hikes.

Spokesperson for the site Christian Grant explains: “The only certainty around this shambolic Brexit affair, is that the number of people having affairs is going to go up. Significantly.”

“One of the leading causes of tension in a marriage is financial pressure, when the tension gets too much a lot of people find themselves stepping out of the boundaries of their marriage and into the arms of a more sympathetic lover.”

How did IllicitEncounters.com members vote in the 2016 EU referendum?

Suzanne Degges-White, Ph.D., chair of the Department of Counselling, Adult, and Higher Education at Northern Illinois University spoke to Women’s Health.

She revealed that if you notice your partner taking more care over their looks it can be a bad sign.

"Unless there’s someone important we want to impress on the job or the dress code changed, it’s unlikely that many of us would suddenly enact a 'personal makeover' when we’re working alongside the same people for years," she said.